The Denver Post

Doctors finding hurdles with using pills to treat coronaviru­s

- By Tom Murphy

High-risk COVID-19 patients now have new treatments they can take at home to stay out of the hospital — if doctors get the pills to them fast enough.

Health systems around the country are rushing out same-day prescripti­on deliveries. Some clinics have started testing and treating patients in one visit, an initiative that President Joe Biden’s administra­tion recently touted.

The goal is to get patients started on either Pfizer’s Paxlovid tablets or Merck’s molnupirav­ir capsules within five days of symptoms appearing. That can prevent people with big health risks from growing sicker and filling up hospitals if another surge develops.

But the tight deadline has highlighte­d several challenges. Some patients are delaying testing, thinking they just had a cold. Others have been unwilling or unable to try the new drugs.

With vaccines and treatments available, “we can make this much more manageable in the future, if people are willing to take care of themselves,” said Dr. Bryan Jarabek, who helps lead COVID-19 treatment and vaccinatio­n efforts for the Minnesota health system M Health Fairview.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized the drugs last year. Doctors hailed the pills as a huge advance in the fight against COVID-19 partly because of their convenienc­e compared to other treatments that require infusions or injections.

But patients can miss the pills’ short window if they dismiss symptoms like a headache or sniffles and wait to see if they go away before seeking help.

Stanford’s Dr. Thomas Lew said he’s seen high-risk and unvaccinat­ed people who have waited more than a week. Some hospitaliz­ed patients on oxygen have told him they thought nothing of their first symptoms.

“They say everyone in the family decided it was a cold or allergy season is coming up, but it was COVID all along,” he said.

People delay seeking help for many health problems, not just COVID-19, Lew noted. But when it comes to the virus, the doctor believes patients may not be aware of the tight deadline.

Even those who get tested quickly, however, sometimes refuse the pills, doctors say.

Jarabek estimates that 30% to half of the patients who qualified for the antiviral pills turned down the treatments in his health system earlier this year.

He said some people didn’t consider themselves high risk or didn’t think they were sick enough to need the pills, which are free to patients. They also worried about side effects or how the drugs would interact with other medication­s.

Jeff Carlson couldn’t try Paxlovid when COVID-19 hit him in January because it might interfere with his heart medication­s. The 61-year-old suburban St. Paul, Minn., resident has Type 1 diabetes and heart disease.

A doctor asked him to try molnupirav­ir about three days after he started feeling symptoms. By then, Carlson couldn’t get off his couch. His fever had soared and he was struggling to breathe.

His wife picked up the prescripti­on and a few days later, Carlson felt well enough to shovel snow.

“It turned me around basically in a matter of ... pretty much 18 hours after I took the first dose,” he said.

Some health care providers have started free delivery services for Paxlovid or molnupirav­ir.

New York City has establishe­d a hotline patients can call if they test positive for the coronaviru­s. They can talk to a care

provider if they don’t have a doctor and have pills sent to them if they are a good candidate.

The Mass General Brigham health system in Boston started a similar program that ships pills to some patients via Fedex.

Raymond Kelly received a package of Paxlovid about three hours after a doctor cleared him for the prescripti­on last month. The 75-yearold Needham, Mass., resident said he caught the virus despite being vaccinated and receiving a booster shot.

His doctor was on the phone with him minutes after the health system notified him that he had tested positive.

“It was all sort of blur because it was going on so quickly,” Kelly said.

Mass General Brigham aims to treat patients quickly and solve transporta­tion problems with its program.

Dr. Scott Dryden-peterson noted that some COVID-19 patients may not be able to pick up pills, especially since they should be staying off buses and ridesharin­g services.

“Transporta­tion is not equally distribute­d in our society,” he said.

For patients with transporta­tion, drugstore chain CVS Health has started “test to treat” programs at its nearly 1,200 stores with Minuteclin­ic locations. Pharmacist­s cannot test and treat, so that program won’t happen at all stores.

Other retailers like grocer Kroger also plan to test and treat at some locations.

Doctors say people at high risk of developing health problems from COVID-19 need to remain vigilant for symptoms and seek help quickly, especially if another surge develops.

“It may not be the time to let your guard down,” said Dr. Greg Huhn of Chicago’s Cook County Health.

 ?? Nicole Neri, The Associated Press ?? Jeff Carlson, a Type 1 diabetic with heart disease, contracted COVID-19 in January, but recovered quickly after being treated with Merck’s molnupirav­ir medication.
Nicole Neri, The Associated Press Jeff Carlson, a Type 1 diabetic with heart disease, contracted COVID-19 in January, but recovered quickly after being treated with Merck’s molnupirav­ir medication.

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